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Current Path : /usr/local/bin/ |
Current File : //usr/local/bin/srs |
#!/usr/bin/perl eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if 0; # not running under some shell use strict; use warnings; use Getopt::Long; use Mail::SRS qw(:all); my ($secretfile, $alias, $forward, $reverse, $help); my $separator = $SRSSEP; my $hashlength = 4; my @addresses; my @secrets; my $result = GetOptions ( "separator=s" => \$separator, "address=s" => \@addresses, "secret=s" => \@secrets, "secretfile=s" => \$secretfile, "forward" => \$forward, "reverse" => \$reverse, "alias=s" => \$alias, "hashlength=i" => \$hashlength, "help" => \$help, ); if (!$result || $help) { print << "EOH"; Usage: srs [flags] [address ...] --separator=s Specify the initial separator to be - + or = --address=s Specify an address to transform --secret=s Specify an SRS cryptographic secret --secretfile=s Specify a file from which to read the secret --forward Perform forward transformation --reverse Perform reverse transformation --hashlength=i Specify number of characters to use in the hash --help Display this help =s denotes a string argument. =i denotes an integer argument Multiple addresses are permitted. Multiple secrets are permitted. EOH exit(1); } die "Separator character must be a single + - or =, not $separator" unless $separator =~ /^[=+-]$/; die "Hash length _should_ be nonzero" unless $hashlength; push(@addresses, @ARGV); die "No address given!" unless @addresses; if (defined $secretfile) { die "Secret file $secretfile not readable" unless -r $secretfile; local *FH; open(FH, "<$secretfile") or die "Cannot open $secretfile: $!"; while (<FH>) { next unless /\S/; next if /^#/; push(@secrets, $_); } close(FH); } die "No secret or secretfile given. Use --secret or --secretfile, " . "and ensure the secret file is not empty." unless @secrets; my $srs = new Mail::SRS( Secret => \@secrets, Separator => $separator, HashLength => $hashlength, ); my $newaddress; if ($reverse) { print $srs->reverse($_), "\n" for @addresses; } else { die "I need an alias address or domain to do forwards transform. " . "Use --alias" unless defined $alias; print $srs->forward($_, $alias), "\n" for @addresses; } __END__ =head1 NAME srs - command line interface to Mail::SRS =head1 SYNOPSIS srs --alias=alias@forwarder.com --secretfile=/etc/srs_secret \ sender@source.com =head1 DESCRIPTION The srs commandline interface will create an instance of L<Mail::SRS> with parameters derived from the commandline arguments and perform forward or reverse transformations for all addresses given. It is usually invoked from a sendmail envelope address transformation rule, a qmail alias, or similar. See http://www.anarres.org/projects/srs/ for examples. Arguments take the form --name or --name=value. =head1 ARGUMENTS =head2 --separator String, specified at most once. Defaults to $SRSSEP (C<=>). Specify the initial separator for the SRS address. See L<Mail::SRS> for details. =head2 --address String, may be specified multiple times, must be specified at least once. Specify a sender address to transform. =head2 --secret String, may be specified multiple times, at least one of --secret or --secretfile must be specified. Specify an SRS secret. The first specified secret is used for encoding. All secrets are used for decoding. =head2 --secretfile String, specified at most once, at least one of --secret or --secretfile must be specified. A file to read for secrets. Secrets are specified once per line. The first specified secret is used for encoding. Secrets are written one per line. Blank lines and lines starting with a # are ignored. If --secret is not given, then the secret file must be nonempty. --secret will specify a primary secret and override --secretfile if both are specified. However, secrets read from --secretfile will still be used for decoding if both are specified. =head2 --forward No argument. Specifies a forwards transformation. This is the default. --reverse must not also be given. =head2 --reverse No argument. Specifies a reverse transformation. --forward must not also be given. =head2 --alias String, must be specified exactly once if doing forwards transformation. Provides the alias address to which the mail was sent. The domain-part of this address is used in the generated SRS address. The local-part and @ are optional and may be omitted. =head2 --hashlength Integer, may be specified at most once, defaults to 4. Specify the number of base64 characters to use for the cryptographic authentication code. =head2 --help Print some basic help. =head1 SEE ALSO L<Mail::SRS>, http://www.anarres.org/projects/srs/ =head1 AUTHOR Shevek CPAN ID: SHEVEK cpan@anarres.org http://www.anarres.org/projects/ =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2004 Shevek. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut